Sunday, 24 February 2008

autism speaks pushes health insurance



Autism Speaks Pushes Health Insurance Coverage in Florida, California and

Michigan

Advocacy group Autism Speaks today announced it would work to pass

legislation in Florida, California and Michigan to require health

insurers to cover autism services such as ABA.

The group's leaders Bob and Suzanne Wright said they plan to meet with

Florida Governor Charlie Crist and legislative leaders in what they

hope will be a bipartisan effort to pass legislation requiring health

insurers to cover autism-related therapies like Applied Behavior

Analysis (ABA) "and other structured behavioral therapies, which are

the most effective forms of treatment and have the best outcomes, both

in human costs and in long-term economic benefits."

"It's time for insurance companies to step up and assume some of the

financial burden now shouldered by families and school districts,"

said Bob Wright. "The autism community is mobilized and determined to

go state-by-state state and knock on every legislator's door until

these unreasonable insurance laws are changed. It's time to remove

these barriers to care."

The announcement cites the fact that so far, Indiana, South Carolina

and Texas are the only states which require insurers to cover

autism-related services and asserts: "Nationwide, few private

insurance companies or other employee benefit plans cover Applied

Behavior Analysis and other behavioral therapies. In fact, most

insurance companies designate autism as a diagnostic exclusion,

meaning that no autism-specific services are covered, even those that

would be used to treat other conditions."

As part of this advocacy effort, Autism Speaks posted a paper citing

arguments in favor of autism insurance coverage. You can see the PDF

document here. It's the same document that advocates in Arizona

published on their website. For more on that, see "Arizona Advocates

Prepare for Autism Insurance Push."

The choice of these big states is interesting as we enter a

presidential election year in which health care is an important issue.

So far in the campaign autism has been mentioned briefly, if notably,

by Democrat Hillary Clinton. (See "Autism Issue Makes Ripple in

Presidential Race.") Autism Bulletin readers responding to an online

poll posted Dec. 17 identified autism services as the most important

factor in their presidential choice.

It's an election year at the state level, too, and that's where the

autism insurance battles will be fought. Autism Speaks said it plans

to continue advocating for passage of a bill in Pennsylvania that was

pending earlier in 2007 and faced opposition from business lobbyists.

Autism Speaks is one of the nation's biggest autism advocacy groups,

and funds research and education initiatives as well as advocacy

efforts. It was founded by the Wrights who have an autistic grandson.

Bob Wright is the former CEO of NBC.

Also see:

* Michigan to Hold Hearing on Autism Insurance Legislation

* Related Autism Bulletin coverage of the health insurance issue


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